People claiming unemployment benefits by constituency, August 2018

Published Tuesday, September 11, 2018

This paper provides figures for the number of people claiming unemployment benefits (the “claimant count”) by parliamentary constituency, as well as a summary of the latest labour market statistics for the UK as a whole. The unemployment rate of 4.0% in May-July 2018 was the joint lowest rate since 1975, while the employment rate remains at a very high level historically and the inactivity rate remains at a very low level. Average weekly pay both including and excluding bonuses grew faster than prices, although the growth in earnings remains relatively weak.

Key figures

The UK unemployment rate was 4.0% in May-July 2018, its joint lowest level since 1975. The ILO measure of unemployment was 1.36 million people, 55,000 fewer than the previous quarter and 95,000 fewer than the year before.

The number of people in employment was 32.40 million, little changed from the previous quarter but 261,000 more than the year before. The employment rate was 75.5%.

8.76 million people aged 16-64 were economically inactive, up 108,000 from the previous quarter and 16,000 more than a year ago. The inactivity rate was 21.2%.

Average weekly pay for employees in Great Britain increased by 2.9% excluding bonuses in the three months to July 2018 compared with the previous year. Average weekly pay including bonuses increased by 2.6%.

CPI inflation averaged 2.5% over this period, meaning that average earnings both including and excluding bonuses grew faster than prices.

Universal Credit and the claimant count

The claimant count figures provided in this paper are affected by the ongoing rollout of Universal Credit. The claimant count comprises people claiming Jobseeker’s Allowance, or people claiming Universal Credit who are required to seek work. Under Universal Credit, a broader span of claimants are required to look for work than under Jobseeker’s Allowance. This has the effect of increasing the number of unemployed claimants. So changes in claimant numbers may be a consequence of the Universal Credit rollout rather than changes in economic conditions.

The effect is most visible in areas operating Universal Credit "Full Service”, where rollout of Universal Credit is more advanced: in these areas, there tends to have been a sharp increase in the claimant count over the past year.